Mourners said a final farewell to Vanessa Whyte, and her children James and Sara, at a service in Barefield, Co Clare, where Ms Whyte was originally from.
The service, which began at noon, was led by Bishop of Ferns Ger Nash, a family friend and former priest of Killaloe.
Vanessa’s sister Regina said the three had been taken in “a cruel and vicious manner”.
In his tribute, Bishop Nash referred to a book by Christy O’Connor, who wrote the history of hurling in the parish.
“He spoke about what a great honour it is to wear a county jersey, but when you wear a club jersey, you wear the jersey of those who will carry your coffin,” the priest said.
“It is sad to realise that that has come true for Vanessa, James and Sara, all too soon and all too sadly.”
Ahead of the service, hundreds of people, many wearing GAA jerseys in line with the family’s wish for bright colours, lined the main street in Barefield.
Three hearses, each adorned with floral tributes, passed slowly by on their way to the service at the Church of the Immaculate Conception.
The three coffins were placed at the front of the church, side by side, topped with photographs of the deceased. Vanessa’s coffin was covered by the mauve and white colours of her childhood club, St Joseph’s Doora Barefield.
During the service, symbols of the lives of Vanessa, James and Sara were brought forward.
A blue card and cattle tag symbolised Vanessa’s work as a vet; a hurley represented James’s “deep love for his club and county”, with the sporting pitch described as his second home; while a cat showed Sara’s fondness for animals.
Paying tribute, Vanessa’s sister Regina said James and Sara “were the focus of her world”.
To applause from mourners, she said the three were “finally safe … Vanessa has her children with her either side of her, as they were when they were alive.”
She recalled how James’ first presents were a hurley and sliotar.
“James’ smile was infectious, and his loyalty was strong,” she said
Sara’s dream was to follow in her mother’s footsteps and become a vet, Ms Whyte said.
At school, the “sassy child became a beautiful, loved teen” with “a smile that would light up a room”.
“She was a normal, happy, 13-year-old teen,” she added.
The Taoiseach and Tanaiste were represented by their aide-de-camp, while the GAA president, Jarlath Burns, was among the mourners.
They represented “the sadness of a nation” at the loss of three people “steeped in the story of the GAA, being laid to rest in the heartland of Clare GAA”, Bishop Nash said.
Also present was Bishop Ian Ellis, chair of the Board of Governors at Enniskillen Royal School, which James and Sara attended, along with the school’s principal and deputy principal.
During his homily, Bishop Nash said so many were “heartbroken at the tragic and unspeakable loss of three lives with so much to give to the world”.
He told mourners: “The tragic events of last week, and the ripping away of three people from their family and friends leave us searching for answers and coming back again and again to the only answer that is completely true: ‘We don’t know’.
“In that darkness, we remember that in John’s Gospel, Jesus is described as a Light that darkness cannot overpower. Truly, we need that light today, and it is hinted at in the bright colours that Vanessa, James and Sara’s family have asked people to wear. The darkness will not conquer.”
The priest said Vanessa “brought immense gifts to her adopted county of Fermanagh, and to her adopted community of Maguiresbridge”.
“She brought this from her family background in Ballyline, from her school time in Barefield and Coláiste Mhuire, and from her very first experiences of farming, animals and nature.”
At great cost, he told mourners, “you have discovered that many people want to walk with you on your journey of pain.”
Bishop Nash referred to condolences on the website RIP.ie.
“Over and over, I could see that women and mothers, as individuals, reached out in their shock and sadness at the loss of a mother and children, but also conscious that there were heartbroken mothers left behind,” he said.
“The messages highlighted the vulnerability of women to pain inflicted by others and were signs of solidarity in the face of that pain.”
Bishop Nash referred to the special place the church had played in the lives of the three.
“It was here in this church that James, Sara and Vanessa received that Sacrament, and it is heartbreakingly sad that their final farewell from life is in this very same church, just a few feet away from the font in which they were baptised,” he added.
The three family members died in a shooting at a property near Maguiresbridge on July 23.
Agricultural contractor Ian Rutledge (43), who died in hospital on Monday, is the only suspect in the triple murder-suicide probe.
Three hearses carrying the coffins for the funerals of Vanessa Whyte and her children Sara and James (Pic: PA)
Hundreds gather at Clare church ahead of funerals of mum and kids killed in Fermanagh shooting
On Wednesday, mourners gathered at St Mary’s Church in Maguiresbridge, with several dressed in bright colours following a request from the family.
Large crowds, including from local GAA clubs, lined the streets outside the church before and after service.
The bodies were then taken to Barefield, ahead of their funeral Mass this afternoon.
On Friday, hundreds gathered in the village to pay their respects to Ms Whyte (45), James (14) and Sara (13) as they lay in repose together.
Fr Brendan Quinlivan from the Diocese of Killaloe said there has been an “incredible sense of sympathy and empathy and outpouring of grief for all of Vanessa’s family”.
The three will be buried together in Templemaley Cemetery.